U.S. ambassador killed in Libya attack 'said he was on al Qaeda hit list'

Raises yet more questions about why there was not security at consulate

Comes amid claims that ringleader behind attack was former Guantanamo inmate handed over to Libya by America

Sufyan Ben Qumu was classified as a 'medium to high' national security risk before his release from American custody

The U.S. Ambassador to Libya who was
killed in a brutal attack on the consulate in Benghazi had said his name
was on an al Qaeda hit list before his death, sources have revealed.

Chris
Stevens had worried about what he called the 'never-ending' security
threats in the Libyan city and was concerned about the increasing
threats of Islamic extremism and al Qaeda, CNNreported.The
revelations, from a source close to Stevens, raise yet more questions
about why he and the three other U.S. citizens killed in the attack were
at the consulate with scant security.The
attack came on the eleventh anniversary of 9/11 after Benghazi had
experienced a string of attacks on foreign targets during the summer.

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Concerns: Chris Stevens, pictured speaking to
Council member for Misrata Dr. Suleiman Fortia, said he was on an al
Qaeda hit list before he was killed in an attack on the Benghazi
consulate

Despite these indications, the
Obama administration had emphasized it was a spontaneous ambush about
which they had no intelligence.

Leader: Sufyan Ben Qumu, who has known extremist ties, became one of the top commanders of rebel forces in Benghazi

But Matthew Olsen, director of the U.S.
National Counterterrorism Center, has now said the attack was planned
and was not merely the result of protesters demonstrating against an
anti-Islamic film.'I would say yes, they were killed in
the course of a terrorist attack on our embassy,' he said at a Senate
Homeland Security Committee hearing on Wednesday.The revelations come as it emerged
that a former al-Qaeda terrorist released from Guantanamo Bay was named
as the apparent leader of the attack on the U.S. consulate.Sufyan Ben Qumu, who was reportedly
once Osama bin Laden's driver, was let out of the US military detention
center in Cuba in 2007 and turned over to the government of Muammar
Gaddafi on the condition he be kept behind bars. Fox News
reported he may have led the September 11 attack on the American
consulate that resulted in the death of Chris Stevens -- the
first US Ambassador killed by violence overseas since 1979.The
US military characterized him as a 'medium to high' risk to national
security while he was in US custody and he refused to cooperate with
authorities and explain his past associations with Islamic extremists.

Qumu, 53, is a Libyan army veteran
who was jailed by Qaddafi and later escaped and moved to Sudan, where he worked
for one of Osama bin Laden's holding companies.

Attack: Qumu was characterized by the US military as a 'medium to high' national security risk

Deadly: Four people died, including US Ambassador Christopher Stevens, during an assault on the US Consulate in Benghazi, Libya

According to some reports, he was bin Laden's driver during his time at the company. However, he denies this.He
also fought against the Soviets in Afghanistan with the Mujaheddin.
Later he took up arms against the Northern Alliance and fought alongside
the Tabliban.

Later,
he moved to Pakistan and slipped across the border into Afghanistan,
where he began working at a charity that was a front for al-Qaeda in the
summer of 2001. He was arrested in Pakistan by local
authorities shortly after the US invasion of Afghanistan. He was taken
to the Guantanamo Bay detention center and held there for six years.

Tragic: John Christopher Stevens is the first US
Ambassador to be killed by violence overseas since 1979. He apparently
died of smoke inhalation after the attack on the consulate in Benghazi

Victims: Sean Smith (left), 34, was a foreign
service computer expert who had previously been posted to Baghdad. Glen
Doherty, 42, was a former US Navy SEAL who was working as a private
security contractor

Despite his lengthy association with
extremists, including the 9-11 mastermind and al-Qaeda leader himself,
the military recommended in a 2005 report sending him back to his home
country of Libya.In 2007, Qumu was released from Gitmo and turned over to Gaddafi on the condition that he be kept in prison. But, in 2010 Gaddafi freed him from
the notorious Abu Salim prison in Tripoli, along with 37 other
prisoners, to celebrate the dictator's 41st year in power. During the uprising, Qumu emerged as a leader of the rebels.

Wrecked: The consulate was badly damaged in the attack that forced US personnel to flee

Extremists: The Libyan government blamed the
attack on Islamic extremists angry over the release of a trailer for an
American anti-Islam movie

He was a tank driver during his time in the Libyan army, though he had been arrested several times on drug and alcohol offenses.In
addition to Mr Stevens, who friends said devoted his life to promoting
peace and cultural understanding, three other Americans were killed when
a mob attacked and burned the consulate in former rebel stronghold
city. Sean Smith, a
foreign service officer, was a 34-year-old father of two. Glen Doherty,
42, was a former US Navy SEAL who was working at the consulate as a
private security contractor. The
attack on the consulate came after the release of a trailer for the
controversial movie 'The Innocence of Muslims,' which paints a portrait
of Islam that many in the Muslim world find deeply offensive.

Destruction: The White House maintains that attack was the work of a mob of Islamic extremists, not organized terrorists

Protests: Unrest remains high in Libya after the release of 'The Innocence of Muslims'

The White House maintains that there was
no evidence the attack was preplanned by a terrorist group -- rather,
they say, it appears to have been a spontaneous mob of Islamic
extremists. 'We are
looking at indications that individuals involved in the attack may have
had connections to Al Qaeda or Al Qaeda's affiliates, in particular Al
Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb,' Mr Olsen told the Senate.However,
he added, 'the facts that we have now indicate that this was an
opportunistic attack on our embassy, the attack began and evolved and
escalated over several hours.'